| Rank | Name | Country | Group | Speeches | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
Lukas Sieper | Germany DEU | Non-attached Members (NI) | 390 |
| 2 |
|
Juan Fernando López Aguilar | Spain ESP | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) | 354 |
| 3 |
|
Sebastian Tynkkynen | Finland FIN | European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) | 331 |
| 4 |
|
João Oliveira | Portugal PRT | The Left in the European Parliament (GUE/NGL) | 232 |
| 5 |
|
Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis | Lithuania LTU | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) | 227 |
All Contributions (101)
Combating organised crime in the EU (debate)
Madam President, Europol's analyses are conclusive on the dimension of the security challenge posed by organised crime: 5,000 organised crime groups under investigation in the European Union. A crime that uses sophisticated technology, which is organized in networks with greater capacity to penetrate the social and economic fabric and that expands its activities: illegal trafficking, weapons, online crime, fraud of various kinds, money laundering and connections to terrorist plots. A crime that is also increasing the use of violence. I would like to refer in particular to the worsening of drug production and trafficking, which has an enormous capacity for corruption throughout the institutional system and its impact on public health – including mental health – as well as Europe’s growing production capacity, not only for synthetic drugs, but also for illegal crops. It would also be useful to look at the entry of organised crime into the field of environmental crime: a terrain in which criminals see business opportunities. The European Union has the resources to meet this challenge and, to do so, it has to mobilize those resources. The key is relatively simple: denunciation, cooperation and technology within our system of freedoms at the service of the fight against crime. That is why we must welcome the improvement of cooperation instruments with, for example, the proposal for a directive on the exchange of information between law enforcement authorities of the Member States, and call for us to further strengthen the regulatory framework and practice of our judicial and police cooperation.
Protecting the Rule of Law against impunity in Spain (topical debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, I would like to be clear and start by saying that Spain does not have a problem with the rule of law, but that the rule of law has a problem with the current government of Spain. Our Constitution and the development of its institutions have made Spain a vigorous democracy and three generations of Spaniards, already, we are proud to have built a system of freedoms since the transition from dictatorship to democracy, with a pact of reconciliation and a widely shared national project. And this is precisely what we want to keep. Attack the People's Party as much as you want, but do not offend women by saying that it is noisy that 200 sex offenders have had their sentences reduced – and this is data – and 19 have been released. Attack the Popular Party, but do not offend taxpayers when the embezzlers of public funds are going to see their penalties reduced as a result of a legal reform of the Government. And, by the way, speaking of cases of corruption, I believe that in Andalusia they will still be waiting for the return of the money taken from you. Attack the Popular Party, but do not offend the citizens when you weaken the protection of the democratic system with a penal reform that eliminates the crime of sedition agreed with the seditious. The Spanish judicial organisation, we know, is suffering the devastating consequences of another legal reform of the government, which has prevented the Council of the Judiciary from appointing judges to the main courts for two years. On the Constitutional Court, I will only say that it is a good exercise to compare its composition and the extraction of its members with other constitutional courts of the European Union. And this is not just a national issue, this is already a European problem. The Commissioner issues a rule of law report every year. It is a problem that has the name and surname of a government that has also made it clear - repeated by the Minister of Justice in Brussels last week - that it does not intend to comply with the insistent recommendations of the European Union and the Council of Europe. This is therefore the reality that we want to highlight and that you, Commissioner, will unfortunately have to continue to face.
EU response to the protests and executions in Iran (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, it is clear that the response to the protests and executions in Iran cannot be a routine appeal. It must be a firm act and, at the same time, a strategy that is sustained over time and well defined, both politically and legally. What is happening in Iran is the crossroads between excessive internal repression and destabilizing activity by the Iranian regime that goes beyond the regional level. Iran is a very serious threat to international peace and security and is a cruel regime that we know lacks legal, political and moral restrictions when it comes to attacking its own citizens. We therefore need to put forward a position of maximum unity in this Parliament - and we are working on that in the resolution that should close this debate - and a very strong commitment. We need to continue to express solidarity and support, but we need to move forward. Both the regime and its leaders must know that their actions, these iniquitous executions, among others, have consequences, that there are culprits and that these responsibilities will not be forgotten, but will be demanded. The Revolutionary Guard, which is the real supporter of the regime, must be included in the list of terrorist organizations of the European Union, it must increase the effectiveness in the application of sanctions, we must provide support to Iranians inside and outside the country, making possible the protection of exiles and refugees from especially threatened minorities, and we must strengthen diplomatic initiatives and facilitate the communications and contacts that the regime wants to suppress by blocking the Internet. And we must express, with all our might, our commitment to the freedom and safe return home of all European citizens detained and subjected to the arbitrariness of the theocratic regime.
The 30th anniversary of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities (debate)
Madam President, I regret that this debate did not end with a resolution, as proposed by the People's Party through our colleague Loránt Vincze. It seems to me that, when we are celebrating this 30th anniversary, this Parliament should not have been absent from a clear pronouncement on this. The protection of minorities is not only a requirement of fundamental rights, it is a fundamental part of the peace architecture in Europe that the European Union represents. But it is also a fundamental part of international architecture, peace and security. The Union sets very high global standards, but we need to make further progress on this path. I would like to point out three points that I think it is important to highlight on this occasion. First of all, that rights, as the UN rightly says, belong to people, and that we have to refer to people and their dignity when we talk about respect for minorities. Secondly, we cannot admit those who disguise themselves as a minority to separate, break up or divide societies. And thirdly, identity cannot be an element of confrontation, neither of language, nor of creeds, nor of cultures. It cannot be an element of confrontation in democratic and pluralistic political systems, nor can it limit or repeal the universality of human rights. Identity with equality. Identity with civic loyalty. Identity with diversity in peaceful and democratic coexistence. I particularly welcome the appointment of an envoy from the Union for Religious Freedom, whom we hope will take our firm convictions of freedom where they are most needed.
EU response to the increasing crackdown on protests in Iran (debate)
Madam President, this debate today is an act of recognition of the courage of the Iranian people. It is easy now to play the card of skepticism, sometimes disguised as realism, and think that repression will end up silencing the protests. But the protests have spread to all provinces. Protests continue and Iranians are standing up to repression. We are not, therefore, facing a déjà-vu. The genius of freedom has definitely come out of the bottle. The theocratic regime has a very serious problem and we must expect this problem to be terminal. Don't let appearances fool us: If the morality police have disappeared from the streets, it is because the regime needs more deterrent and repressive capacity than the veil keepers offer. The Iranian regime, moreover, is a serious risk that goes beyond the regional realm, as evidenced by the fact that Iran has become Russia's key ally. Let's be concrete: Is it acceptable for Iranian ambassadors to the European Union to remain peacefully installed in their residences? Is it acceptable that the repressive forces of the Iranian regime, starting with the Revolutionary Guards, continue to act unmarked for what they are, destabilizing organizations of a terrorist nature? There is an urgent need to continue to give answers.
Setting up a comprehensive framework for missing children and missing persons at risk (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, this debate highlights a reality that is often silenced. The data, the figures, have already been given here. And, although we probably do not have completely accurate data, in any case, this reality is an overwhelming reality. It is true that behind these disappearances there may be different causes: mental health problems, voluntary disappearances, accidents... But that is not usually the case for adolescents and children. In a Union without borders, very close police cooperation, the support of citizens and also the incorporation into police work of identification and information exchange technologies, which are effective and absolutely essential tools, are needed. In this regard, it is not acceptable, for example, that an interoperable child disappearance alert system has not been completed. But rather than pointing out or exposing anyone, it is essential that such an approach at European level, in the face of this challenge to our safety and the rights of children, prioritises capacity-building in those Member States that may have the most difficulties, the greatest workload or are most behind in cooperation procedures. European agencies, both Europol and CEPOL, should have a very special mission in this strategy to empower law enforcement agencies in all Member States. The scale of the problem shows that it is not only a national problem, even less so when the increase in migratory and refugee flows to the Union aggravate the vulnerabilities and risks of people, whether adults or children, who may end up missing and exploited.
Impact of Russian invasion of Ukraine on migration flows to the EU (debate)
Mr President, Commissioner, just as we do not spare criticism when things are not done well, we must show what works: the Temporary Protection Directive is working, the financial effort in support of refugees and host countries is a sustained and substantial effort, and solidarity is real. We know that this front, that of concrete solidarity with the Ukrainians, is also decisive for the Russian aggression to fail and for the European Union to make visible its unity against the aggressor. However, we need to be aware that, in the midst of this humanitarian crisis, conventional migration flows continue to increase. The figures for 2022 are reminiscent of 2016, when the European Union was experiencing the largest migration crisis in its history, triggered by the conflict in Syria. From January to August there has been a 75% increase in irregular entries compared to last year. We enter a situation that in a short time can become critical. We need to offer a European solution to restore trust between Member States and restore citizens' confidence in our ability to manage migration as a Union. We can't afford any more extensions. The next crisis may be just around the corner, if you are not knocking at the door already.
Countering the anti-European and anti-Ukrainian propaganda of Putin’s European cronies (topical debate)
. – Mr President, Mr Vice-President, Mr President-in-Office of the Council, the war of aggression against Ukraine allows us to see in all its gravity what the strategy of disinformation and interference means. And the first conclusion is that disinformation and interference are also a war. When we face States that do not hide their ambitions, whether economic, territorial or nuclear, the disinformation they practice is the way to prepare the ground for the use of force. Before Putin bombed Ukraine, he had bombarded minds and opinions with a permanent campaign of hatred and demonization against Ukrainians and their authorities. Military force came later. Therefore, let's know that disinformation is the canary in the mine: It always heralds danger. After his military failures, Putin can only hope that any of these three hypotheses will work. First, the threat of the use of nuclear weapons. Secondly, a political change by some NATO ally, in the hope that it will call into question the aid Ukraine receives. And, thirdly, the withdrawal of the West due to fatigue. Well, in any of these hypotheses, and for them to work, the massive use of disinformation, interference, manipulation, acting through personalities and political, social and media organizations allied with Russia and related to its anti-Western narrative is essential for Russia. Let us therefore all be vigilant – institutions, politicians, the media, social organisations – not to let public opinion in our countries be polluted by lies, threats and manipulation at this crucial moment.
The death of Mahsa Amini and the repression of women's rights protesters in Iran (debate)
Seventeen days have passed since protests began following the killing of Mahsa Amini in Iranian police facilities. How many Iranians have been killed? Hundreds. How many have been arrested or injured? Thousands. We don’t know for sure. Women are beaten and dragged away by police. But let us get it right: this is not only about mandatory veiling or the hijab. This is about basic freedom. This is about a regime founded on systematic repression and cruelty against its people. A regime headed by someone fully involved in the massacre of 1988, a crime against humanity that has already come to European courts. A Swedish court has imposed a life sentence on an Iranian official for taking part in this crime. There is an uprising going on in Iran, and we have not only to condemn repression, but to support the victims of repression. We need to send a clear sign of our concern and condemnation, but also an unequivocal message of support: Europe means pluralism, democracy, freedom of religion, respect for all belief, equal rights between men and women. And those Iranians struggling for their rights, risking their lives, deserve to see Europe firmly on their side. Europe at its best: friendly, supportive and committed. There should be specific demands to the Iranian Government on the release of prisoners and accountability of perpetrators, no matter how long it takes. But neither the nuclear deal nor the oil resources of Iran can justify turning a blind eye or watering down our response. Appeasement, we should know, never works.
Situation of fundamental rights in the EU in 2020 and 2021 (debate)
Mr President, this morning the President of the Commission recalled that democracy cannot be taken for granted and neither can freedom: This must be our starting point. The European Union, including Spain, remains a great democratic area, committed to the preservation of the rule of law, and now also has to be an example of special firmness in combating actions, discourses and ideologies that wish to put an end to representative democracy; some threats come from outside, others we have inside: There is populism that pretends to embody a popular will above the law, but also ethnic, racist and exclusionary nationalism. Democracy and freedom, diversity and pluralism are attacked, in the name of religion, ethnicity, identity or language, and this threat is still present in the European Union. A concrete, but substantial, aspect of this is the narratives that in my country legitimize the violence perpetrated for almost half a century by a terrorist gang. That is why, I reiterate, Commissioner, the need to speedily push forward with the revision of the Directive establishing minimum standards on the rights, support and protection of victims of crime in the way recommended in this report in order to strengthen the protection of victims and to give guarantees that any act of humiliation and attack from social sectors related to the aggressors will be avoided.
The relations of the Russian government and diplomatic network with parties of extremist, populist, anti-European and certain other European political parties in the context of the war (debate)
Madam President, it would be very interesting to know how many thousands of tweets, photos and videos were hastily deleted after Russia started its aggression against Ukraine. Social networks show that the influence of Russia and Putin has gone beyond the capture of elites, the financing of foundations or parties, or the penetration of media and universities. We have to deal with the Russian aggression against Ukraine and we have to deal also, in democratic Europe, with the proxies Putin's ideology. Some see Putin as the man of iron, the patriot, the herald of values, the representative of manhood and the hope that everything they consider condemned by the decline of the West will survive. Others, nostalgic for communism, identify Putin with the survival of that old communism that, after its defeat, has been transformed into aggressive nationalism. Well, in front of each other, let's continue to investigate, let's continue to draw the map of Russian interference. But let us also issue a warning to those who want to act as Putin's fifth column, a warning to his proxies ideological: Let us know who they are and confront them to preserve freedom and democracy.
Use of the Pegasus Software by EU Member States against individuals including MEPs and the violation of fundamental rights (topical debate)
Mr President, this is such an important debate and the issue is so serious that, indeed, care must be taken not to bring in travellers without a ticket, not to bring in free riders, those who want to appropriate the concern of this House in order to turn it into a sounding board for their victimhood. To these travelers without a ticket, to these free riders of Pegasus, they like to present themselves as persecuted exiles, when in reality they are mere fugitives from justice, or they want to pose as defenders of the rule of law, when in reality they have starred in the most flagrant and unusual rupture of the maximum expression of the rule of law, which is the Constitution. Even some parties that now teach us starred, for example, in my land, in the Basque Country, some famous cases of political espionage, those yes accredited before the courts in other times. I will always argue that a fundamental right, and of course also the fundamental right of those travellers without a ticket, can only be affected in clearly defined circumstances for well-founded reasons and with the guarantee of an independent judge. And I have no reason to assume that the law establishing these guarantees has been violated in the case of Spain. A distinction must therefore be made between dissidents and fugitives. It will be necessary to distinguish between those who can legitimately desire, claim, ask for the independence of a territory and those who in the name of independence organize, participate and lead seditious processes. A distinction will have to be made between victims of arbitrariness and the legality of those who may be subject to the legal action of a democratic State when the State legitimately defends itself.
Strengthening Europol’s mandate: cooperation with private parties, processing of personal data, and support for research and innovation (debate)
Mr President, Madam Commissioner, at this time of the evening I think that it is not the support some of you have expressed, but your physical presence in the hemicycle that I really have to thank you for. Let me just say that Europol’s record is a success and we have to prolong and to strengthen that success, that I am aware of the doubts and the criticism that has been expressed from some groups and some Members. I regret to say that some of them stem from an utterly inaccurate representation of what the regulation says. For example, Europol is not allowed, and won’t be able, to enter alerts from the Schengen information system on its own, and certainly not on persons who have no relation with any criminal activity. That is simply false. But let me stress that, once the regulation is in place, we will all have a different and a new role. There will obviously be a new role for Europol – a new mandate, new responsibilities, new capabilities. There will be a new role for the Commission, of course. Some of the new duties brought back about the development and implementation of the Europol regulations are, and will be, very important. There will be a new role for the EDPS in reinforced intervention in the activity of the agency. And there will be a new role for Parliament and the instruments that we have placed in the hands of Parliament to increase and strengthen democratic oversight. I think that if we all use the instruments that the new regulation places in our hands, Europol will be better and all these doubts will simply disappear.
Strengthening Europol’s mandate: cooperation with private parties, processing of personal data, and support for research and innovation (debate)
Mr President, in my capacity as rapporteur I am particularly honoured to address the Plenary on the new Europol Regulation. This Regulation, the new mandate for Europol, marks a substantial, I would say, leap forward in the capabilities of the Agency, in its ability to support Member States, in the governance framework and, last but certainly not least, in the enhanced system of safeguards that we have put in place. This Regulation is the result of a shared concern about the need to have a better and more efficient instrument to support Member States in a security landscape with evolving and increasingly complex threats. Let me underline that the Parliament has been at the forefront in promoting the Europol recast. I’d like to commend and express my appreciation for the work done by my colleagues, the shadow rapporteurs, from the very beginning of this process following the presentation of the legislative proposal by the Commission on 9 December 2020. We have dealt with sensitive issues from different views but we have been able to create an atmosphere of real cooperation and open exchange. No concern has been overlooked and no contribution has been disregarded. And let me add that in the best spirit of compromise even those outside the majority consensus can see some of the contributions reflected in this regulation. We have established a sound legal basis for the analysis and processing of large and complex data sets, and accordingly, there will be extended information sharing and enforcement rights for the EDPS on Europol planned data processing operations. Under the new mandate, Europol will cooperate effectively and directly with private parties for establishing jurisdiction. And will be allowed to exchange data with private parties directly in online crisis situations related to the massive dissemination of terrorist content and in the fight against child sexual abuse material online. Europol will be able to support Member States in the use of emerging technologies and in developing common technological solutions. And under the new mandate, it will be possible for those projects to include the processing of personal data for the sake of security, subject to very tight safeguards. The new mandate also provides for the capacity of Europol to propose Member States the entry of information alerts in the interest of the Union in the Schengen Information System, based on information received from third countries or international organisations. The new mandate clearly improves and widens the scope of the cooperation with the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) and with the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF). Europol and EPPO should conclude a working arrangement setting out the modalities of their cooperation, taking due account of their respective competences. The increase of the capacities should ultimately be matched by adequate resources for Europol. But more importantly it will be accompanied by more transparency, parliamentary oversight, greater democratic accountability and a wide array of safeguards that guarantee full respect for data protection. That is a major political achievement of the Parliament and it shows our ability to reach reasonable and workable compromises, first among us, the political groups represented in this Parliament, and then with the Council. And I have to commend the role the Commission has been playing. I think that the Parliament has delivered on its duty. We have taken into account the new operational requirements of law enforcement, the necessary balance with the basic responsibilities of Members States, which remains in the hands of Member States, the conditions for an enhanced police cooperation and the safeguards and democratic oversight that go along these developments. A better governance, an efficient system of oversight and controls proportionate to the new capabilities that we place on the Agency will only result in a better and more efficient Europol which is fit for the challenge. That is exactly what this regulation is all about.
Cooperation and similarities between the Putin regime and extreme right and separatist movements in Europe (topical debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, this is a necessary and timely debate, but not all of them are here. Right-wing extremists? Of course. Separatists? Of course. But isn't there anyone on the left? Because it is not necessary to be an expert in French politics to know what the speeches are and what Mr Mélenchon thinks of the Russian invasion, and it is not necessary to be an expert in Spanish domestic politics to know that a part of the governing coalition continues to oppose military aid to Ukraine. And Putin has obtained the sympathy of those who see in the invasion of Ukraine the resurrection, or at least the aroma, of the old Soviet Union, and also the sympathy of those who consider that Russia is the refuge of what traditional or racial values are not known and, of course, has achieved the complicity of separatist movements. In short, everyone who wants to set the European Union on fire knows that, once the fuse is lit, Putin will come with gasoline. The report of the Special Committee on Foreign Interference in All Democratic Processes in the European Union, particularly Disinformation, chaired by the rapporteur, Mr Glucksmann, clearly reveals the skein of interests and complicities that we have to undo, including those complicities with the separatists. Even today, in this same House, we want to be taught lessons of respect for pluralism, democracy and the rule of law by representatives of Catalan separatism, political instigators of sedition, who denounce a democratic state like Spain, while we know that among them there are those who have run to seek the protection of Moscow, the support of an autocracy, and who wanted the same disinformation and propaganda apparatuses that today lie against Ukraine to act in favor of their purpose of breaking the unity of a democratic state that is a member of the European Union – and Russia collaborated. Therefore, if any conclusion should be drawn from this debate, it is to remind Jefferson when he said that the price of freedom is eternal vigilance: Ukrainians know this and are suffering from it, and Europeans should not forget it.
Foreign interference in all democratic processes in the EU (debate)
Mr President, hybrid war is war, and it is in the light of the war that Russia has declared that we have to read this report As Russian tanks roll into Ukrainian territory, let’s not forget that the invasion has been paid by disinformation, interference and cyber-attacks. This report, which has been brilliantly produced by Sandra Kalniete, is a major and timely contribution to the protection of democratic institutions. It is based on conclusions and findings of experts and researchers but it is a political document demanding political action. The invasion of Ukraine is a wake-up call, and we need to raise awareness of the challenge of a structural confrontation with Russia as the main threat to our security. We simply cannot tolerate the extension of Russian influence, and this report shows how to prevent it. We have enemies. The European Union has been targeted. We know that Russia, whatever the concrete attribution might be, is always there ready to destabilise, be it in Brexit or in the secessionist move by Catalan nationalists or COVID-19. So funding of populist and extremist parties did capture anti-European narratives. The state-owned media, which by no means deserve to be called journalism, are components of a reality that we have to face up to. And it is high time to act, stepping up the efforts and the shared commitment of Member States and European institutions.
The death penalty in Iran
Mr President, dear colleagues, seven months ago the European Parliament demanded the Iranian Government the immediate release of Ahmadreza Djalali. Today we reiterate that for Djalali and for the thousands of political dissidents, protesters, activists and members of ethnic, religious and sexual minorities unfairly imprisoned and arbitrarily and summarily sentenced to death by the Iranian regime. But apart from Djalali, Muhammad Jawad, Narges Mohammadi, Akbari-Monfared and so many thousands of peaceful Iranians have no time to spare. It’s a moral imperative that the European Union, with its High Representative at the helm, leads a strong response to the Iranian regime. The response must be followed by the commitment of all its Member States. A response that needs to include further targeted sanctions if necessary, and must include also a UN mission on the ground and an independent investigation into the violations of human rights in this country. And let me say that I wonder if we are being too generous to the Iranian regime because when we speak of the death penalty, even with unreserved rejection of it as this is the case, I mean it suggests that previous judicial procedure, some kind of legality. That is not the case. In fact, there is no death penalty in Iran. There are sheer executions: state murder as a form of crime against humanity. Look at the appalling repression, enforced disappearances and massive executions of political dissidents in the 1988 massacre and notice that there has been no investigation or accountability for these crimes that involve the current leader of Iran in a prominent role. Look at the horrifying record of Iran in executions: at least 275 last year, including 10 women and two child offenders. We cannot turn a blind eye. The European Union is not just another voice in the international arena. The European Union is in a unique position to advocate for the abolition of the death penalty and has a unique responsibility to do so. No other political community in the world carries the moral authority and the credibility to demand the end of this inhumane, irreversible and cruel punishment. We take pride in our human rights standards. We demand respect for the rule of law. Well, we have to live up to the values we hold so dear. Respect for life is not a privilege, it’s a basic right. And where and when this right is violated in such an abhorrent and massive manner, those who suffer – and it is the case of the Iranian people – are entitled to expect from us our solidarity, our support, our awareness and our help.
The Rule of Law and the consequences of the ECJ ruling (debate)
Madam President, the conditionality mechanism has a legal basis, falls within the competences of the Union and is very clearly defined by the Court. It is about protecting the budget, not sanctioning. There has to be a real link between the infringement and the impact on financial management. The measures have to be proportionate. The application of the mechanism is subject to strict procedural requirements and subject to review by the European Courts. This is not an arbitrary instrument, but a framework of legal certainty both for the EU institutions that have to implement it and for the Member States, for all of them. Now what? Now the Commission and, possibly, the Council have to assume their responsibility. The Court has done what it had to do. Parliament has provided the legal instrument to do so. Because, no matter how many debates we have, recurring debates, sometimes redundant debates, Parliament cannot and must not fill this gap, either legally or politically. The situation – Article 7 and conditionality – is currently on track to become unsustainable. It damages the credibility of the Union, it damages the meaning of the legal instruments we have established and it damages trust and, therefore, the willingness of states to cooperate in many areas. It is not for us to prejudge now what the Commission has to propose and what the Council has to decide in due course. Yes, it is time to insist, to demand that there are proposals and decisions, because at this moment the prudent thing is to act.
Announcement of voting results
Mr President, dear colleagues, I address the chamber today as rapporteur for the legislative package on Europol to ask you to confirm the decision adopted by the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs (LIBE) to enter into interinstitutional negotiations on the two draft legislative acts, namely the revision of the Europol regulation and the consequential amendment of the regulation on the Schengen Information System. The reform of Europol’s mandate is a long-standing request by this Parliament, and I was mainly motivated by the need to equip the agency with new tools and capabilities to face the digital transformation. Criminals have adapted their modus operandi to the new digital reality, and consequently it is necessary to enable Europol to better support Member States in the fight against these evolving security threats. The two legislative reports, which were adopted by a large majority of 75% of the votes cast in LIBE last week, build on the main elements of the legislative proposals of the European Commission, while introducing additional safeguards to ensure the fundamental rights, in particular, the right to the protection of personal data, are respected. The report, furthermore, includes provisions to enhance parliamentary oversight and the accountability of Europol, marking a substantial progress and striking the right balance between new capabilities and closer democratic scrutiny and oversight. Consequently, I kindly request for your support for both decisions, which gather a broad support in the LIBE Committee, so allowing us to enter into negotiations so we can start the discussion with the Council and the Commission soon with a view to deliver new legislation that will allow Europol to better support the Member States to counter serious crimes and terrorism in full respect of fundamental rights.
Increased efforts to fight money laundering (debate)
Mr President, Commissioner, when more than 1% of the Union's gross domestic product is involved in suspicious financial activities, it is clear that money laundering is a serious financial and fiscal problem, but it is also a serious security problem. That is why we need a two-pronged, integrated approach: on the one hand, surveillance and prevention and, on the other hand, coercion to be able to act effectively, from a police and judicial point of view, against laundering and against the underlying crimes. In that regard, the Commission's initiatives are promising, and I hope they will be improved in the parliamentary debate. Let me refer in particular to the authority that is called upon to coordinate European actions on money laundering, because I understand that it is important that it fits in and strengthens the capacities that already exist in the Union, in particular Europol, to fight financial crime through close mechanisms for coordination and exchange of information that we will have to discuss in due course.
The rise of right-wing extremism and racism in Europe (in light of recent events in Rome) (debate)
Madam President, allow me to join the words of the Presidency in announcing the Sakharov Prize and in the recognition due by this Parliament to Afghan women. The first thing in my speech is to express the most absolute, most radical condemnation of the acts of violence that bring us to this debate. We have full confidence in the actions of the Italian authorities, which we know are facing this threat with all determination and with all the legal and constitutional instruments at their disposal to prevent anyone who uses, justifies or exalts violence from having a place in a democratic system. It is now up to us to support Italian society and its authorities, and I want to do so here. Violence is fought with the weapons of the rule of law. He is not offered accommodation either on the streets or in institutions. It is a threat to democracy that brings us here to debate, and it is a threat to the security of Europeans and their freedoms. In the real world and now, very worryingly, too, in the digital world. Indeed, we have reason to worry, because this radicalism, this fascism in Europe, appears with different faces: the face of anti-Semitic fascism that threatens and desecrates and wants to perpetuate the violence of persecution against Jews; xenophobic fascism that wants to replace the law with hatred; such nationalist fascism as that which attacks and threatens young militants of my party in the Basque Country and forcibly silences civic organisations defending the Constitution in Catalonia – as happened with the S’ha Acabat! University Association recently in Barcelona; and that fascist populism that talks about the people but divides and confronts them. Democratic systems in Europe face polarising pressure from extremes, which are the worst legacy of the totalitarianisms we have suffered. Therefore, no tolerance, no commitment to those who use violence. Neither when they say they use violence to defend the nation nor when they say they assault policemen to make social revolution.
Pandora Papers: implications on the efforts to combat money laundering, tax evasion and avoidance (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists warns that, due to the complexity and secrecy of the offshore system, it is not possible to know how much of that money is linked to tax evasion and other crimes and how much it includes funds that come from legitimate sources and have been declared to the competent authorities. The difference between the legal, although it seems inappropriate to us, and the illegal is an essential difference and, to this end, raises different problems and issues. And I say this because we are facing a debate in which sometimes the most striking or the most scandalous is not always the most important thing. And I am referring specifically to the fight against money laundering. We have made remarkable progress, but the most recent police operations once again highlight the enormous dimension of this problem. The ongoing review of European legislation is important. We need legislation, but - and it has been said - we also need implementation and resources. Create a company offshore It's not illegal. But we also know that this legal engineering, associated with tax havens, activated by intermediaries and complicit advisors and enhanced by current digital financial tools and products, forms complex circuits in which the trace of illegally obtained money is lost. We need a strict, realistic and credible assessment of the list of tax havens and cooperation obligations from the European Union. And this Parliament must firmly demand compliance with those obligations.
Artificial intelligence in criminal law and its use by the police and judicial authorities in criminal matters (debate)
Mr President, there is no doubt that artificial intelligence is a strategic technology of the 21st century and that this technology also has a place in the field of criminal justice and law enforcement. Today there are forms of crime that can only be combated as effectively as we want if we make innovative technological tools available to law enforcement and the courts. Let us think of money laundering, the financing of terrorism, the proliferation of terrorist content online, trafficking in human beings by immigration mafias or for the purposes of sexual or labour exploitation, or the proliferation of child sexual abuse content, which requires work to identify the victims and identify the perpetrators and the places where the abuses have been committed and which tests the psychological resistance of those who have to do this identification work. It is true that algorithms have to improve and that their risks require surrounding their use with large safeguards. But I am not in favour of absolute prohibitions, but of guarantees such as those laid down in the amendments tabled by my group in relation to prior judicial authorisation. We have to offer an environment that facilitates the development of artificial intelligence, also in those areas that can be described as "high risk", with due guarantees. And let me tell you that when you talk about examples from other cities or other countries, I get the impression that racist biases in these cases are not exactly in the algorithms.
The case of Ahmadreza Djalali in Iran
Madam President, in December 2020, the second session of the Antwerp trial was about to start. An Iranian diplomat and his accomplices were being tried and later sentenced for the attempted bombing of the annual gathering of the Iranian democratic opposition in Paris. That day of the trial, the Iranian authorities announced that Ahmadreza Djalali was going to be executed. And today we are coming together in this Parliament in a call to halt his execution again. Terrorism against democratic opposition on European soil; number one executioner of women in the world; unrestrained use of the death penalty; relentless persecution of ethnic, religious and sexual minorities; destabilising strategies in the region; host of al-Qaeda leadership; and now Ebrahim Raisi elected as president – someone under shocking and well-grounded allegations of human rights violations so serious that the UN investigator on human rights in Iran has called for a thorough investigation on the massacre of 1988 and Raisi’s involvement in it. Raisi’s election should end the delusion about the existence of so-called moderates having any role within the Iranian regime. By supporting Djalali, we support the people of Iran, because there is a new Iran that is struggling to emerge, and committed to embrace the democratic principles of governance. So let’s make every diplomatic effort within our reach, as we are supposed to do. But let’s not forget the struggle for democracy, separation of state and religion, gender equality, respect and protection of the rights of minorities. While we urge the Iranian authorities to free Djalali, we should ask how many Djalalis, whether they are European citizens or not, remain locked up in Iranian prisons. And how many of them will be killed unless we strengthen our response to Iran’s autocracy and its determination to prevail over the suffering of its people.
Foreign interference in democratic processes (debate)
Madam President, Mr High Representative, in a relatively short time we have become aware of the challenge of disinformation, but we have also become aware of the limited means the European Union has to deal with this problem. That is why all the points raised by Parliament are relevant and relevant, both the definition of the StratCom's mandate and the sufficiency of its resources and the most effective coordination between administrative structures. But we have forgotten the sanctions. The Commission had the courage and the wisdom to name the countries that are the source of the most aggressive major disinformation strategies. Well, we must continue on that path. It's not just about detecting, denouncing, neutralizing, attributing. We also need to take the step and speak the language of sanctions to actors, state or otherwise, who use these strategies to destabilize democracy and intoxicate political debate. It's not about defining the truth, it's about pointing out what is a lie. And, although we know that there may be difficulties in attribution, we must not fall into the naivety of thinking that in China, Russia or Iran there are non-state actors who are free to operate. It is therefore necessary for the veil to fall on this reality and for its responsibilities to be exposed and for action to be taken in the language of sanctions, which must be included in all the means available to the Union.